Background/Aim: The presence of circulating tumor cells (CTC) has been reported to have an impact on prognosis in different tumor entities. Little is known about CTC morphology and heterogeneity. Patients and Methods: In a multicenter setting, pre-therapeutic peripheral blood specimens were drawn from patients with non-metastatic esophageal adenocarcinoma (EAC). CTCs were captured by size-based filtration (ScreenCell ®), subsequently Giemsa-stained and evaluated by two trained readers. The isolated cells were categorized in groups based on morphologic criteria. Results: Small and large single CTCs, as well as CTC-clusters, were observed in 69.2% (n=81) of the 117 specimens; small CTCs were observed most frequently (59%; n=69), followed by large CTCs (40%; n=47) and circulating cancer-associated macrophage-like cells (CAMLs; 34.2%, n=40). Clusters were rather rare (12%; n=14). CTC/CAML were heterogeneous in the cohort, but also within one specimen. Neither the presence of the CTC subtypes/CAMLs nor the exact cell count were associated with the primary clinical TNM stage. Conclusion: Morphologically heterogenic CTCs and CAMLs are present in patients with non-metastatic, non-pretreated EAC. Over the past decades the incidence of esophageal squamous cell carcinoma has decreased significantly in the U.S. and Europe. At the same time, the incidence of adenocarcinoma (EAC) has increased rapidly, especially among men (1). Although overall survival has improved over the years thanks to new treatment strategies, the prognosis is still limited (2). We still lack tools for better pre-therapeutic risk-stratification for cancer recurrence, which would enable us to design patientadapted treatment strategies. Currently, treatment decisions are being made based on CT-scans, endoscopic findings, endoscopic ultrasound and tumor biopsy. This momentary pretherapeutic "tumor-image" of the patient does not adequately reflect the actual tumor biology and aggressiveness. More than 50% of the patients initially considered curable will eventually relapse or develop metastasis after complete resection of the tumor (3). This relapse could be due to clinically invisible distant micro-metastases and tumor dissemination at an early time point, or due to lack of treatment response. A promising tool to evaluate these occult metastases for risk stratification and treatment surveillance is the use of liquid biopsy (4). Liquid biopsy summarizes the analysis of tumor cells and tumor-derived products in body fluids, like circulating tumor cells (CTC) (5-7), circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) (8, 9) and extracellular vesicles (EVs) (10-12). In the case of EAC, there are very limited studies available regarding CTC presence and their significance in general (5, 13-16). CTC have been found in about 20% of patients using epithelial surface antigen (EpCAM)-dependent isolation devices in EAC. These patients 5679 This article is freely accessible online.